Cubitermes, Josens & Deligne, 2019

Josens, Guy & Deligne, Jean, 2019, Species groups in the genus Cubitermes (Isoptera: Termitidae) defined on the basis of enteric valve morphology, European Journal of Taxonomy 515, pp. 1-72 : 35-36

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.515

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F7AB8B53-FEB1-4473-8B22-DFEC9CE98FDD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5585095

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD879F-FF8C-FFE0-FF51-FC2BFD8DB352

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cubitermes
status

 

2. The bilobatodes valve pattern group

The workers within this pattern have basic enteric valves: all six primary cushions are similar in their arrangement ( Fig. 13A View Fig ). In the upstream and middle spiny parts, they are armed with relatively strong spines becoming gradually thinner downstream; the middle part also bears some lateral supporting spindle-like bristles leaning on the funnel membrane. In the downstream bristly part, the spines are rather abruptly replaced with longer and bristle-like setae, first straight, then curved and eventually hooked. The primary cushions are mainly fusiform: their largest width is located between the first upstream third and the middle, and their lateral margins converge gradually upstream and downstream ( Fig. 11C View Fig ). The odd PCs are longer than the even PCs, giving triradial symmetry to the valve ( Fig. 13A View Fig ).

An odd PC is made of (a) an upstream spiny part (27–51% of total length) with relatively strong spines, (b) a middle spiny part (24–47% of total length) with somewhat weaker spines and with 13–30 lateral supporting bristles on each side, and (c) a bristly part: (22–37% of total length) with 35–75 straight, curved and eventually hooked bristles ( Fig. 11C View Fig ).

The secondary cushions are either broad at the upstream end, narrowing noticeably downstream, with a homogeneous scattering of spines (as in Fig. 4E View Fig for the species from East and Southern Africa), or somewhat stalked, widening near the first third with a heterogeneous scattering of spines tending towards the shape of a spearhead ( Figs 4F View Fig , 13A View Fig for the species from West and Central Africa).

In the soldier’s enteric valve, the primary cushions are similar to those of the worker with triradial symmetry, the odd PCs being longer than the even PCs; the secondary cushions are broad and either homogeneous or with a tendency towards the shape of spearheads ( Fig. 13B View Fig ).

This basic valve pattern is therefore characterised by high alternation indices in both workers and soldiers and by fusiform odd PCs; most species are small- to medium-sized.

Material examined

Five species have such enteric valves:

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Blattodea

Family

Termitidae

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